Space conquest: when France recruited Nazi engineers to develop its rockets | EUROtoday

“The first French advances in the field of rockets are linked to a dark history”. This phrase written on an indication in downtown Vernon constitutes an actual turning level. For the primary time, a everlasting exhibition will permit this metropolis, situated in Eure, to look its previous within the face. Inaugurated on Sunday April 26 on the event of National Day in reminiscence of the victims and heroes of deportation, it lastly highlights the darkish aspect of the French conquest of house.

80 years in the past, in May 1946, France selected this Normandy metropolis to determine the LRBA, the ballistics and aerodynamic analysis laboratory. The goal? Allow France to develop its personal civil and navy launcher expertise.

“Vernon was going to be one of the main contributors enabling France to become the third world power in the race to conquer space after the USA and the Soviet Union. It was here that the main propellants which equipped the Véronique rockets (from 1948 to 1974), then Vesta, then Viking, and Vulcain were developed. From the 1970s, the site developed the engines for the various Ariane projects”, describes Laurent Thiery, historian on the Resistance Foundation.


A photograph taken on April 9, 1968 on the Kourou house heart, in French Guiana, of the launch of the primary Véronique rocket. AFP – –

Also learnSpace conquest: Ariane, 50 years within the service of Europe

“A brain hunt”

To obtain this success, the nation, which was lagging significantly on this space after the Second World War, sought to make use of German engineers. “At the end of 1945, General de Gaulle gave authorization to the intelligence services to recruit them directly on the territory of the Reich. Particularly in the French occupation zone, it was a matter of, through particularly attractive contracts, preventing these brains from being all recovered by the Americans or the Russians. It was a real brain hunt that was underway to find the main German players in missile and aeronautics development,” explains Laurent Thiery.

Attracted by the salaries, the chance to remain in Europe or escape seize by the Soviets, round 150 engineers and researchers had been shortly recruited. Ninety of them had been despatched to Vernon the place they settled within the heights of town with their households in a spot known as by its inhabitants Buschdorf, the “village of the bush”.

These males acquired their abilities whereas serving the Third Reich. As the historian factors out, “all participated in the development of rockets at the Peenemünde research site on the Baltic, where the main Nazi special weapons were developed for Hitler and in particular the A4-V2 rocket between 1937 and 1945.” “It is still difficult to know whether these men were convinced Nazis, but by necessity the majority had joined the Nazi party,” he specifies.

Sadly, the Peenemünde website grew to become one of many components of the Nazi focus camp system. Starting within the spring, greater than 2,500 Buchenwald deportees, together with 400 French, had been despatched to Peenemünde to work assembling the rockets. The V2s had been additionally assembled between 1943 and 1945 within the Mittelbau-Dora focus camp, situated in central Germany. More than 60,000 deportees, together with 9,000 French individuals, had been subjected to compelled labor there.


The entrance to the Dora tunnel in April 1945 after the liberation of the camp. © NARA

Also learnPeenemünde, birthplace of the Nazi V2s and German nationalist stronghold

“The appalling mortality experienced by the deportees”

According to Laurent Thiery, director of the analysis program on deportees from the Mittelbau-Dora camp, these German scientists couldn’t have been unaware of the horrific manufacturing situations within the Dora tunnels, notably the engineer Karl-Heinz Bringer, recruited by France in 1946: “He confirmed having been there several times.”

However, when questioned on this topic in 1986, the person who is taken into account the “father of the Ariane rocket”, put the prisoners’ experiences into perspective: “He declared that the situations had been these of basic employees and that, I quote ‘the boys who had been in Dora may have lived to be 100 years previous’ and that he himself had a very copious breakfast, and many others. Particularly negationist remarks in comparison with the appalling mortality skilled by the deportees on this camp and estimated at almost 20 000 useless, together with greater than 4,500 French,” insists the historian.


A web page from the unique register of Dora’s deaths for the times of February 17 and 18, 1944. © Laurent Thiery

For many years, the contribution of those engineers to the Nazi loss of life machine was due to this fact saved silent in France. This was additionally the case within the United States the place Wernher von Braun, an engineer within the Dora focus camp, grew to become a protégé of the Americans after the struggle. Father of the Apollo mission and the mission that took the primary males to the Moon in July 1969, he noticed his legal profession hidden by NASA.

“None of these men, neither in France nor in the United States, was worried or tried. Many obtained the highest recognition,” summarizes Laurent Thiery. “It was needed to guard the integrity of those scientists within the context of the post-war interval, nationwide reconstruction and Franco-German rapprochement. Clearly, we’re making use of a ‘motive of state’ which takes priority over the need for justice and reparation for the victims.


Aerospace engineer Wernher von Braun, then technical director of the Peenemünde rocket heart, meets Nazi Wehrmacht officers throughout an indication for the launch of the V-2 rocket, deliberate for June 20, 1944 in Germany. AFP – –

A narrative that now not passes

Decades later, this omission has endured. In 2023, an exhibition was organized in Vernon on these German engineers. All had been portrayed as heroes of the conquest of house, with none point out of their function within the camps. An absence which aroused the anger of households of deportees. Since then, this model of the story has now not been accepted. In 2025, the municipal council of Saint-Marcel, in Eure the place Karl-Heinz Bringer died in 1998, selected to rename a avenue within the title of the German engineer after studying his negationist interview.


The previous avenue named after Karl-Heinz Bringer, within the city of Saint-Marcel, in Eure. © Laurent Thiery

The work of historians has additionally made it attainable to interrupt the silence by offering entry to archives linking a few of these scientists to the crimes of Nazism. The publication in 2020 of the “Mittelbau-Dora Dictionary”, which highlights the journey of almost 9,000 deportees from France, additionally contributed to this turnaround.

On Sunday, to mark the inauguration of the exhibition, round ten households of prisoners despatched to this camp will obtain a numbered ebook which pays tribute to their relative. “It was fundamental to be able to involve descendants, in particular families from Eure because this moment of memorial shift is probably the best opportunity to pay tribute to the sacrifice of their parents,” believes Laurent Thiery, who supervised the creation of this work.

Also learnMittelbau-Dora camp: a “paper monument” to rescue deportees from oblivion

Great-granddaughter of the deported Camille Maireau, Marjorie Prieux shall be current in Vernon. Her great-grandfather, a resistance fighter arrested for having helped these resisting the STO, making false identification playing cards and serving to the Eure maquis, lived via Dora’s hell. His journey is recorded within the dictionary of which Marjorie Prieux will obtain a duplicate: “We will show it to our entire family. We will be its spokespersons. It is a duty to remember. It is our family history in the great History”.

Repatriated to France in May 1945, Camille Maireau died six years later on account of the mistreatment suffered throughout deportation, in Andelys, about twenty kilometers from Vernon the place a few of his former executioners had been situated. “It’s really meaningful, but today we are in peace time with Germany,” says the fifty-year-old.

This descendant of a deportee has no resentment. For her, this ceremony marks above all Franco-German friendship: “We unfortunately know that wars develop technological advances. Finally, German engineers made their knowledge available to the development of Ariane rockets. I think it is important to remember this on a historical level. But today, in these uncertain times, we must celebrate peace between our two countries.”


{A photograph} of resistance fighter Camille Maireau taken on his return from the camps in deportee clothes. © Family Archive

Also learnWhen the Lutetia resort in Paris welcomed survivors of focus camps

An area campus

If the city corridor of Vernon, of which Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu is the primary deputy, has lastly turn into conscious of this previous, there’s nonetheless some reminiscence work to be completed. Since 2019, town’s former navy website has turn into a “space campus”. MaiaSpace, a subsidiary of ArianeGroup, has notably put in a reusable mini-launcher manufacturing unit there to compete with the fashions produced by Elon Musk’s SpaceX. A primary flight is deliberate this 12 months.

According to Laurent Thiery, the engineers who work on website at this time should not sufficiently conscious of this historical past. “It is very sad that during their personal training the past of Nazi scientists and the story of Dora are not taught to them,” he notes. “Current space news encourages us all the more to set the ethical limits that science and political projects in this area should respect, hence the importance of recalling the history of Germany in the 1930s and 1940s and the compromise of scientists in a criminal regime.”

Also learnLiberation of the Nazi camps: tips on how to retrace the journey of a deportee

https://www.france24.com/fr/france/20260426-conquete-spatiale-france-vernon-ingenieur-allemand-nazi-guerre